http://openings.chessbase.com/?lang=en
This one will show theory from both sides, and you can also create a repertoire rather simply it seems.
http://www.chesstree.net/
This one will show, in tree form, what the most common moves at each rating range are, and so you not only study the best moves against the best moves, you also can study the best moves against the common moves at your rating.
Looking for a Chess Opening Tree for Beginners Recommendation


I have made opening tree posters that do what you describe, but with more depth, i hope not too much :P https://chessmaps.etsy.com

I mostly share my own theory. I wouldn't do REQUESTS. I was raised with the saying "someone's got a case of the gimmies"
I show gratitude if someone helps me out as several videos have introducing me to juicy gambits no one will talk about in forums because people listen to chess snobs more than stats
I was interested if there was a feature within here in chess.com or elsewhere that has a collection of more or less common openings that can be explored with a focus on the opening names rather than physically playing out the moves until the opening is displayed. I know you can search for openings and learn, but I was interested in finding a tree like structure that is limited to say top 100 openings/side variations by popularity. As a beginner it is difficult to see which openings are stemmed from other openings and get lost in the sea of ideas.
I know there is a website such as chesstree.net which is which basically meets what I am looking for. However, if I do not know the exact move order for both sides I would have to manually look up the opening. Basically looking for more of an extensive crash course for the most popular openings that builds on it self.
As a simple example in chesstree.net, if I am looking to play a London and I do not know the correct move order for white and black, I would need to either try a bunch of nodes until I find it, or look up a video that explains how to get to the position. I know this would have to limit many possibilities, but would be great as a primer to openings to visually see how they are structured and what types of openings are excluded each move.
Hopefully that makes sense!